Posts Tagged ‘orchestra’
Posted by glennled on November 21, 2015

Sarah Dunsmore, LWSD Honor Band Trumpeter
She started trumpet lessons with me in 2009—six years ago—and thus became my fifth private student. Now she’s a senior at Juanita High School in Kirkland and made the High School Honor Band in the Lake Washington School District (LWSD). Her plans are to study music education at Central Washington University in Ellensburg, starting in fall, 2016. I’m proud of her—Sarah Dunsmore.
On 3 November, she played in the LWSD Honor Concert at Redmond High School. There were 8 trumpeters–three from Juanita, two from Redmond, two from Lake Washington, and one from Eastlake high schools. The band’s guest conductor was Dr. Christopher Bianco, who is the Department Chair, Associate Professor, Director of Bands and Brass at Western Washington University (WWU) in Bellingham. The 59-member Honor Band played three pieces to conclude the concert:
- Festive Overture by Shostakovich, arr. Hunsberger
- Irish Tune from Country Derry by Percy Grainger,
- Joy Revisted by Frank Ticheli
The 58-member Honor Orchestra opened the concert with Dr. Ryan Dudenbostel conducting. He is Director of Orchestral Studies at WWU. Next came the Honor Choir, comprised of 37 members who were conducted by Dr. Geoffrey Boers, Director of Choral Activities at the University of Washington.
Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Dr. Chris Bianco, Western Washington University
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Dr. Chris Bianco, WWU, conducts LWSD Honor Band
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LWSD Honor Orchestra (R), Honor Band (Center), and Honor Choir (L), 2015-16
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LWSD Honor Orchestra, 2015-16
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LWSD Honor Orchestra (R) and Honor Band (L), 2015-16
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LWSD Honor Choir (L) and Honor Band (R), 2015-16
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LWSD Honor Choir, 2015-16
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Dr. Geoffrey Boers, UW, conducts LWSD Honor Choir
Posted in School Concerts | Tagged: band, choir, concert, Dr. Chris Bianco, Dr. Geoggrey Boers, Dr. Ryan Dudenbostel, Frank Ticheli, honor, Hunsberger, Lake Washington School District, lesson, LWSD, orchestra, Percy Grainger, Shostakovich, trumpet, trumpeter | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on September 22, 2015

When school started this fall at Skyview Jr. High School in Bothell, there was a new faculty member in the music department for the first time in 15 years. Welcome to Mr. Charlie Fix, Band and Orchestra Director. Mr. Fix has a Masters Degree in Music Education from Florida State University and a Bachelor’s Degree in Music Education from the University of Wisconsin. Like his predecessor at Skyview, Mr. Fix is a trumpeter!
Mr. Fix has previously taught at Prince George’s County Public Schools in Maryland, Carlsbad Unified School District in California, and Mount Vernon Community Schools in Iowa. He has taught music at all levels, elementary, junior high, and high school, in addition to teaching as a graduate assistant at Florida State.
Here at SJHS, he has three para-professional assistants to help with the 1st and 2nd year elementary bands. One teaches flutes, one teaches clarinets and saxes, and the other teaches brass–that’s me!
Posted in Skyview Junior High | Tagged: band, brass, Charlie Fix, orchestra, Skyview Jr. High School, trumpeter | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on May 2, 2015

2015 NSD 6th Grade Honors Orchestra (left), Choir (center), and Band (right)
In a stellar performance, three honors groups—the best NSD musicians of 2015—entertained a packed house at Northshore Junior High School in Bothell on 10 February at the annual Northshore School District’s (NSD’s) Sixth Grade Honors Concert.

NSD 6th Grade Honors Band (right), Choir (center), and Orchestra (left)
First was the Honors Orchestra, conducted by Jim Rice of Inglemoor High School. Next was the Honors Choir, conducted by Kyra Renstorf of Woodinville High School and Leota Junior High School. Finally was the Honors Band, conducted by Janie McDavid of Shelton View Elementary and Kenmore Junior High School. [Incidentally, Mrs. McDavid’s husband is Dr. Brad McDavid, Director of Athletic Bands, University of Washington, who is featured in numerous posts in this blog.] Each group performed four pieces. The program was emceed by Ted Christensen of Inglemoor High School (IHS), who is Music Coordinator for the Northshore School District. This is his 32nd year at IHS.
Below is a gallery of photos from the concert. As usual in this blog, I highlight trumpeters in the band, three of whom I teach at Skyview Jr. High School in Bothell. In all, Skyview contributed 12 musicians to the Honors Band. Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Jim Rice conducts 2015 Honors Orchestra
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Ted Christensen emcees the 2015 Honors Concert
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Krya Renstorf conducts 2015 Honors Choir
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Janie McDavid conducts 2015 Honors Band
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Posted in School Concerts | Tagged: band, choir, concert, Dr. Brad McDavid, honors, Janie McDavid, Jim Rice, Kyra Renstorf, Northshore School District, NSD, orchestra, Shawn McGinn, Ted Christensen, trumpeters | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on April 29, 2015

Mr. Jim Rice conducts IHS Symphonic Band
This year’s “Winter Holiday Concert” at Inglemoor High School’s (IHS’s) Performing Arts Gymnasium in Kenmore on 18 December 2014, started with about 30 minutes of music by the school’s jazz band, as the full-house audience arrived and got seated in the grandstands. They played Bernard’s “Winter Wonderland,” among other tunes. Mr. Jim Rice is the Jazz Band Director, and he also conducted the Symphonic Band (including “Themes from ‘The Nutcracker'”) and String Orchestra (Holtz’s “In the Bleak Midwinter”).
Mr. Ted Christensen directed both the String Orchestra (Anderson’s “Sleigh Ride”) and the Wind Symphony (including “Flourish for Wind Band”). The Wind Ensemble featured 8 new cornets in “The Sussex Mummers’ Christmas Carol” by Richard Franko Golman. Mr. Christensen is not only the IHS Band Director but also the Northshore School District Music Coordinator. This is Mr. Christensen’s 32nd year at IHS. The Wind Ensemble took a trip in April 2015 to play at the “Ring of Fire” Concert in Carnegie Hall in New York City.
The Concert Choir, Belle Voci, and Chamber Choir were directed by Teresa Sullivan, who is both IHS Choir Director and Music Department Chair.
Below is a photo gallery of the concert. Please click on any photo to enlarge it.
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Jim Rice (left), IHS Jazz Band Director
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Flugelhorn solo
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Teresa Sullivan conducts IHS Concert Choir
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IHS Symphonic Band (left)
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Jim Rice conducts IHS Symphonic Band
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IHS Belle Voci (right)
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IHS Belle Voci
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Jim Rice conducts IHS String Orchestra
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Ted Christensen conducts IHS String Orchestra
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Curt Hayes, Inglemoor Instrumental Music Boosters
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IHS Chamber Choir
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Teresa Sullivan conducts IHS Chamber Choir
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IHS Wind Ensemble (left)
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Ted Christensen conducts IHS Wind Ensemble
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For a more smooth, mellow sound, the Wind Ensemble uses 8 new cornets
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Posted in Inglemoor High School, School Concerts | Tagged: band, Carnegie Hall, choir, concert, cornets, IHS, Inglemoor High School, jazz, Jim Rice, music, orchestra, symphonic, symphony, Ted Christensen, Teresa Sullivan | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on June 1, 2014
On 31 January 2014, as a para-professional, I taught my first music classes at Inglemoor High School. Several trumpet ensembles from two IHS bands, the Wind Ensemble and Symphonic Band, were in the final week of practice for the regional competition to be held on Saturday, 8 February. Winners advanced to the state competition.
On my first day, I critiqued their practice sessions, and for the remainder of this school year, I will continue to teach their sectional sessions. I work with the Symphonic Band trumpeters (8) on Mondays and the Wind Ensemble trumpeters (7) on Fridays. Mr. Ted Christensen is IHS Band Director and Northshore School District Music Coordinator. He conducts the Wind Ensemble. Mr. Jim Rice is Director of the IHS Orchestra, Symphonic Band, and Jazz Band.
Posted in Inglemoor High School, Student Competitions, Honors & Awards | Tagged: band, Christensen, Inglemoor High School, jazz, orchestra, Rice, sectionals, trumpet, trumpeters, wind ensemble | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on May 31, 2014
On 19 December 2013, the music program presented its “Sounds of Winter” concert in the Inglemoor High School Gymnasium. The Orchestra, Symphonic Band, Jazz Band, Concert Choir, Belle Voci, Chamber Choir, Mass Choir, and Wind Ensemble all performed for the large crowd. There are 8 trumpeters in the Wind Ensemble and 7 in the Symphonic Band. The Wind Ensemble is directed by Ted Christensen, who also is the Northshore School District Music Coordinator. Jim Rice directs the Symphonic Band and Jazz Band. At this concert several pieces were conducted by Megan Webster, Student Intern, Central Washington University.
The 45-member Symphonic Band performed “On This Day Earth Shall Ring,” “Wishing You a Merry Christmas,” and “The Bells of Christmas.” The Wind Ensemble (66 members) performed “Stars,” “Jesus, Jesus Rest Your Head,” and “Christmas Festival.” The Orchestra performed “Dances from the Nutcracker.” The music program enjoys the support of the Inglemoor High School Music Boosters.
Posted in Inglemoor High School, School Concerts | Tagged: band, ensemble, Inglemoor High School, music, Music Boosters, Northshore School District, orchestra, symphonic, wind | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on January 22, 2013
On Sunday, 13 January, it was time for my wife and me (opera novices) to be re-introduced to Gioachino Antonio Rossini, the
composer whose nickname was “The Italian Mozart.” We were both familiar with The Barber of Seville, but it was so long ago, we can hardly be sure of when, where and what. So off we drove to McCaw Hall not knowing what to expect to see and hear at the Seattle Opera’s matinee performance of Cinderella (La Cenerentola)—almost 200 years after it premiered at Teatro Valle, Rome, 25 January 1817.

Prince Ramiro wins Cinderella in Seattle Opera’s “La Cenerentola,” with sets and costumes designed by Joan Guillén – Photo © Elise Bakketun
It turns out that Rossini’s Cinderella is a romantic comedy of the bel canto (“Beautiful Singing”) kind. The story was altered by librettist Jacopo Ferretti both in characters and in plot, but yes, in the end, the prince does get the lovely, virtuous Cinderella as his bride. This takes two acts stretched over three hours (including a half-hour intermission). During the pursuit, there are lots of laughs and some extraordinary singing.
The basic premise of the opera, writes Spreight Jenkins, General Director of the Seattle Opera, is that the prince wants to marry someone who loves him for himself, not his position, power or wealth. That romantic ideal still plays well in 2013 in Western society, does it not? Cinderella, called Angelina in this opera, is a forward-looking person who also will marry only for love but wants respect, too. She is not a male-dominated person, and she is not ambitious to become a princess. She stands up for herself, knows what she wants, and wins it fair and square on her terms—her man must be willing to make an effort to win her. This idea of feminity is still modern and plays well in 2013 in America and elsewhere, does it not? Jenkins writes in Encore, “There’s a lot of humor, but we see in Angelina a far more recognizable and believable young woman than many created in the nineteenth century. She is generous when she wins, and altogether she is a really charming person who might fit very well into the twenty-first century.”
Here’s what the bel canto style meant when it was dominant from the 18th century until about 1840, according to the experts at Wikipedia:
- an impeccable legato production throughout the singer’s (seamless) range
- the use of a light tone in the higher registers
- an agile, flexible technique capable of dispatching ornate embellishments
- the ability to execute fast, accurate divisions
- the avoidance of aspirates and eschewing a loose vibrato
- a pleasing, well-focused timbre
- a clean attack
- limpid diction
- graceful phrasing rooted in a complete mastery of breath control

Alidoro (Arthur Woodleyj), tutor to Prince Ramiro, has other plans for Cinderella – Photo by Alan Alabastro.
The music was written to show off the exceptional quality of the singers’ voices. I especially enjoyed the various ensembles. The precision of the attacks, phrasing, and breath control were remarkable and often, as intended, funny! I imagine it would be quite challenging and possibly exhausting to sing for so long in that style. Among the voices I enjoyed the most were those of Angelina (Cinderella), mezzo-soprano; Alidoro, bass; Dandini, baritone; and Don Magnifico, bass.

Courtesy of Seattle Symphony & Opera Players’ Organization
I enjoyed listening to the orchestra, too, hearing and watching how the music from the pit matched the action on stage. It’s great fun to play trumpet in the orchestra of a musical or an opera. I did both long ago on the college level—but now I’m just a happy spectator. I wonder if any of my trumpet students will ever have that wonderful experience. I hope so. That would please me, as did this . 😉 Please click on any photo to enlarge it:
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Daniela Pini (Cenerentola) – Photo © Elise Bakketun
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Father and daughters plot for one to wed the prince – Dana Pundt (Clorinda), Patrick Carfizzi (Don Magnifico), Sarah Larsen (Tisbe), and Daniela Pini (Cenerentola) – Photo © Alan Alabastro
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The real valet, Dandini (Brett Polegato), pretending to be the prince, invites Tisbe (Sarah Larsen), Don Magnifico (Patrick Carfizzi), and Clorinda (Dana Pundt) to his ball. – Photo by Alan Alabastro
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Gioachino Rossini, painted c. 1815 by Vincenzo Camuccini
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Portrait of Gioachino Rossini in 1820, International Museum and Library of Music, Bologna, Italy
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Photograph of Gioachino Rossini (Ransom Humanities Research Center, The University of Texas at Austin), USA
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Gioachino Rossini, photographed by Félix Nadar, 1858
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Gioachino Rossini, photographed by Étienne Carjat, 1865
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Portrait of Gioachino Rossini by Francesco Hayez, 1870
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Italy
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Rossini’s now-empty tomb at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France
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Rossini’s final resting place, in the Basilica of Santa Croce, Florence, Italy
Posted in Professional Concerts | Tagged: bel canto, Cinderella, composer, ensembles, Ferritti, La Cenerentola, librettist, McCall Hall, music, opera, orchestra, Rossini, Seattle Opera, Seattle Symphony & Opera Players' Organization, Spreight Jenkins, The Barber of Seville, trumpet | Leave a Comment »
Posted by glennled on December 20, 2012
Please click on any of the 32 photos to enlarge it.
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7th-Grade Band, SJH
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Six trumpets, four trombones, one baritone
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Two French Horns
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8th-9th Grade Band, SJH, entertains orchestra (upper right), 7th grade band (middle right), and full-house audience
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The Brassy side of the band
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The Woodwinds side
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Trumpets (lead on left)
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More trumpets…
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And more trumpets…
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And even more trumpets…
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Hit it!
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Who’s playing? Saxes, tuba, baritones and French horns
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Muted trumpets
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Front and center
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Full orchestra
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Advanced orchestra
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Mr. Shawn McGinn, SJH Director of Instrumental Music
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Jazz 1 Band, SJH
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The Four trumpets
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Trumpet solo 1 (lead)
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Trumpet solo 2
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Trumpet solo 3
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Trumpet solo 4
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Alto sax solo
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Tenor sax solo
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Baritone sax solo
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Piano solo
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Mr. Shawn McGinn conducts
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Jazz 2 Band
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Four trumpets
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The Four Trumpeters
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Dawn Mark, SJH Principal, congratulates Shawn McGinn on the concert and the music program
Posted in School Concerts, Skyview Junior High | Tagged: band, concert, Dawn Mark, instrumental, jazz, music, muted, orchestra, Shawn McGinn, Skyview Jr. High, solo, trumpet, trumpeters | 6 Comments »
Posted by glennled on June 9, 2012
‘Twas the last Sunday of the season for the church orchestra and choir, 3 June. Now comes the summer break. Lucky me, I got to play 3rd trumpet when one of the regular players had a conflict. This church conducts three services every Sunday morning, and we played four songs—three at each service. It’s easy to see why our conductor favors the arranger, Dan Galbraith—he’s superb! He arranged three of the pieces below. And B.J. Davis did a super job, too, arranging Nichole Nordeman’s beautiful song, “Glory.” She is a Dove Award-winning songwriter (see http://www.doveawards.com/).
If you want to look over the scores and hear samples of the orchestration and arrangements, please see the following:
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“Glory” by Nichole Nordeman, arr. by B.J. Davis
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“All to Us” on the album, “Here for You”
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“Evermore” on the album, “Believe”
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“I Will Rise” on the album, “Hello Love”
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Posted in Church Music | Tagged: All to Us, B.J. Davis, choir, Chris Tomlin, church, Dan Galbraith, Dove Award, Evermore, Geron Davis, Glory, I Will Rise, Nichole Nordeman, orchestra, song, trumpet | Leave a Comment »